Archives for October 2016

The Emotional Imprisonment of the Modern Male

Jason Connell’s shares a powerful, long form essay about the various issues causing the emotional imprisonment of the modern male.
Nov 2013, Washington, DC: I fell in love with R* way too quickly. I was on the heels of a serious breakup and trying to convince myself I was ok. She was getting over the pain of a failed engagement. It seemed like we fit together perfectly (if also, toxically) and dated for a few weeks. It felt big and real and exciting.
Then, without warning, she vanished.
I was wrecked.
I was depending on this relationship to make me complete. Without it I could feel my already fickle happiness and confidence slipping through my fingers.
When I realized R* was gone, I went on a seemingly endless walk along the National Mall.
I thought to myself, “That’s how life is. People will make you happy for a little while, but then they’ll hurt you mercilessly. You’ll have to pull yourself up, find another person to make you happy for a bit, and try to delay the inevitable pain. Enjoy the next 60 years asshole…”
I don’t remember the exact moment or what triggered it, but being abandoned by R* made me realize something important: I am directly responsible for my life experience.
My happiness, health, emotional well-being, success, and everything else that I care about? They’re my responsibility. I can’t outsource them to anyone else, not even a girlfriend. Somehow, I had missed that for the first 27 years of my life.
The subtle crisis of masculinity
When I look at the boys and men of my generation, I notice that we seem to be experiencing a crisis of masculinity.
Many of the men I meet struggle to understand their emotions, fail to form deep connections with the people around them, lack a sense of vision, and fail to source drive and validation from within. This leaves them feeling isolated and alone and deprives the world of their potential contributions.

Overview

What follows are the six biggest problems  I notice men dealing with today. In each section, you’ll find an explanation of the problem, as well as practices, ideas, and guidelines on how to solve them.
Along the way, we’re going to cover everything from erectile dysfunction and the fear of being unlovable to flawed masculine archetypes. I’ll conclude with a call for men to embrace their raw masculinity.
This article clocks in at nearly 4,000 words. If you’d like to jump around, you can find an overview of the article below. 
Problem 1: A lack of deep purpose
Problem 2: An unexpressed fear of being unlovable
Problem 3: Sexual shame, confusion, and posturing
Problem 4: Difficulty embracing, expressing, and processing complex emotions
Problem 5: Flawed male archetypes
Problem 6: The delusional desire to be self-sufficient
Practices for the modern man
A return to raw masculinity

1: A lack of deep purpose

Many of the men I meet drift through life. They find a job that pays the bills, marry someone they almost love, have 2.4 children, and then fill the remaining space with beer, TV, video games, and other sources of white noise. This isn’t a terrible existence, but it lacks a deep sense of purpose.
I’ve noticed that many men -myself included- live more vibrantly and powerfully when they are rooted in a sense of personal purpose.
One man may find purpose in striving to become the best athlete at his gym. Another may feel driven to write poetry. A third may want to end poverty. The specific purpose varies from man to man and is likely to evolve over time. What matters is that a man pursues his purpose purely for himself.
The best way to find purpose is to spend time alone. Create silence within your life. Do not distract yourself with books, friends, or TV. Go for long, undistracted walks. Meditate. Journal. Remain open to the thoughts, ideas, feelings, and realizations that come to you. It’s difficult to predict when clarity will come. Don’t be surprised if it comes quickly. Don’t worry if it takes time.
If spending significant time alone and in reflection doesn’t feel right to you, consider discussing your search for purpose with a few people you trust. Listen carefully to their feedback, but don’t feel bound to it. Trust yourself.
When you feel a sense of purpose starting to animate you, ask yourself, “Does this feel like the best way for me to engage with the world?” If the answer floods you with energy and excitement, you’ve found the seeds of your purpose. Now begin living that purpose. Your purpose may change, expand, contract, or morph over time so be sure to periodically check in with yourself.

2: An unexpressed fear of being unlovable

When men fail to process and express complicated emotions, they build walls around their hearts. These walls make receiving love very difficult. Many of the men I know readily give love and compassion to other people, while being exceptionally hard and cruel to themselves.
If you have never learned to love yourself, consider approaching the problem from two angles. First, ask yourself the question, “If I deeply loved myself, what would I do differently?” Chances are you’d prioritize your health, fill your day with treats for yourself, and set stronger boundaries in your personal and professional life. When you start doing these things, you’ll begin to chip away at the walls guarding your heart. Start now.
Secondly, you should work to heal old wounds. This includes digging into your life story, feeling the pain and sadness that you’ve been avoiding, and accepting yourself as you are, warts and all.
This work is best done with a coach or psychologist who specializes in this style of heart opening work. However, if you’re going to attempt it on your own, here is what I suggest: write out your entire life story in a stream of consciousness narrative. Do not judge anything that comes up. Instead, pay attention to the times when you were being cruel to yourself and the times when others were cruel to you. When you notice these instances, connect to the emotion and sit with it.

3: Sexual shame, confusion, and posturing

The messaging men get about sex is as straightforward as it is destructive: the more women you sleep with, the more of a man you are.(1) If you choose not to have many partners – or if people don’t find you sexually desirable – you’re not much of a man. Men are also told that sex is primarily a physical (as opposed to emotional) experience.
Obviously, this is bullshit, but it’s bullshit that runs deep in men’s psyches.
On one end of the spectrum is the man who becomes consumed by sex. He studies pick up artists, builds his social life around trying to meet women, and measures his worth by the number of partners he’s had. Without necessarily meaning to, he ends up thinking of women as objects and failing to understand them as humans. Many of these men end up feeling as though women are adversaries and that love and sex is a power struggle.
The other extreme is the man who feels shame around his sexual identity and attempts to suppress it. Instead of pursuing love and sex, he quietly resolves to stay in and masturbate. When he does have sex, he feels guilty, as though his partner is doing so at her own expense. When these men fall in love, they find themselves perpetually being friend-zoned. This becomes discouraging, and they end up feeling plagued by fears of being unlovable or undesirable. They feel tragically flawed.
What men need to do is develop a healthy attitude towards love and sex. They need embrace their sexual identity, without becoming defined or consumed by it.
Doing so starts understanding a few simple truths that most men fail to realize about sex:

  • Sex is one of the most vulnerable, intimate things that two people can do together.
  • It’s normal to be uncomfortable about sex. Unfortunately, the discomfort leads to men avoiding real conversations about it.
  • Though many men deny this, sex – even casual sex – is a highly emotional experience. If it weren’t, men would stop pursuing women and just stay at home masturbating. Obviously, that’s not what happens; the physical presence of another human matters. A lot.  If you can connect with the other person emotionally,  the experience tends to be better.
  • Sex with strangers tends to be isolating.
  • Erectile dysfunction is deceptively common. To put it bluntly, about half of my guy friends have called me at one point because they were experiencing erectile dysfunction.
  • Premature ejaculation is also deceptively common.
  • If you suffer from either erectile dysfunction or premature ejaculation, the first step is to talk to your partner about what you’re going through. Yes, doing so is hard. However, virtually all men are delighted to discover that their partners are accepting and nurturing. In many cases, honest conversation helps solve the problem. If it doesn’t, consider talking to your doctor.

Overcoming sexual shame requires being honest with yourself about your experience with sex and love. From there, the approach to getting what you want from your love life varies from man to man. Here are my best suggestions if you’re struggling:
If you are afraid to make a move, or if you are plagued by isolation, stop watching pornography and spend less time masturbating. Try to eliminate pornography entirely and only masturbate once or twice a week. This will build up the sexual energy in your body and force you to dwell in reality. Many men find this extremely difficult so if you slip up be sure to be easy on yourself.
If you’ve been putting a lot of pressure on yourself to date, get laid, get married, or if your life is dominated by searching for love or sex,  remove the pressure. Intentionally take a month or two off from dating. Doing so will force you to find happiness and validation from other sources. Earlier this year I took four months off of dating to focus on myself. My goal was to build a life I loved on my own, and then find a partner. When I decided to start dating again, it took almost no time at all to find a great partner.
If you’ve been going on dates from time to time, but struggling to connect, change your goal.  Your goal should be getting to know the person you’re dating, nothing more. Ask questions. Listen. Instead of being quick to judge, seek to understand. If they ask questions about you, be as honest and vulnerable with your answers as you can.
If you’re ashamed of sex, dig into your past. What did your caretakers, religion, or culture tell you about sex that made you ashamed? Did you have a traumatic experience like rape, molestation, or sexual embarrassment that you’ve been avoiding? The more you understand the root of your problem, the easier it will be for you to unravel it.

4: Difficulty embracing, expressing, and processing complex emotions

B* is a close friend of mine. When his wife was in her second trimester, they had a miscarriage. B* didn’t tell anyone. In fact, the only reason I know they miscarried is because his wife told me.
Of all the problems I see facing modern men, the most significant is the inability to connect to and process their emotions.
Boys learn not to express vulnerability. As children we are told that “Real men don’t cry.” If we do cry, we’re likely to be mocked. Boys who express fear or sensitivity are called, “Pussies.” Through years of social conditioning, emotional suppression becomes habit for most guys.
If a man never works to rewire his relationship to his feelings, all of his negative emotions remain unexpressed and pent up. This blunts the positive emotions and leads to a deep, penetrating sense of isolation. It also results in temper problems and unpredictable flashes of anger.
Fortunately, all people can learn to connect to their emotions. Here’s how:
First, get clear about how you feel. The easiest way to do this is through honest reflection. For connecting to simple emotions, going on a walk or journaling works well. For untangling more complicated emotions, you’ll likely need a few days of reflection. Personally, I like to go into the mountains or to the sea. If you are not the type to spend several days on your own, another approach is to talk through the issue(s) with people you trust. It’s important that you feel comfortable being honest and vulnerable around them and that they won’t shame you for your vulnerability
By holding space for reflection, you’ll be able to connect to yourself. You may be surprised by what you discover. Do not judge what comes up – that will only create further closure. Instead, stay open. If you cry, you cry. If you laugh, you laugh.
Second, use curiosity to get the to root of your emotions. Upon reflection, you may notice, for example, that you’re frustrated because your girlfriend lectures you about appropriate social interaction. When you notice a feeling that you find difficult, ask yourself why you feel that way.
Perhaps you’ll discover, “I get frustrated because I don’t think I need any help with social interaction.” So you ask, “Why does it bother you when people think you need help with social interaction?” And so on and so forth until you get to the root of the feeling.
Third, once you’ve uncovered a difficult emotion and gotten as close to it’s root as you can, express it. Expressing your emotions can happen through a wide variety of methods, including, but not limited to:

  • Artistic creation (music, painting, wood work, etc)
  • Controlled rage (like smashing plates, pounding pillows, hitting a punching bag)
  • Conversation
  • Sports
  • Writing

Finally, if you’ve noticed that you need something, give it to yourself. Perhaps you need time away from your spouse, you need to rest more, or you need your kids to respect your boundaries. Start giving yourself the things you need. By prioritizing yourself, you’ll be better equipped to take care of the people you love and influence the world around you.
The end goal is to be able to understand what you’re experiencing in any given moment. Many men will discover that the more adept they become at expressing and understanding their emotions, the more smoothly their entire lives go.

5: Flawed male archetypes

One of the biggest problems facing modern men is a lack of healthy male archetypes. The three most common have tragic flaws:
The 1950s man. These are the guys who get caught up in gender roles and feel the need to be the provider. They get insecure if their partner makes more than them. They deny the value – and at times, the existence – of their emotions. When they are struggling with something, they remain closed off to the world and the people around them. They’d rather suffer in silence than risk being vulnerable and asking for help.
The millennial man-child, more commonly known as the nice guy. These are the guys who lack a strong sense of self and are afraid to be assertive. They can’t handle emotional friction and avoid confrontation. They have a quiet sense of entitlement that prevents them from taking responsibility for their lives. When I was dating R*, I was one of those guys.
The third, and perhaps most common, is the reformed frat boy. He can hold down a job, but lacks genuine ambition. He makes an ok boyfriend, husband, and father, but fails to form deep connections with himself and the people he loves. He’s learned to use humor to disarm uncomfortable situations, instead of doing the hard work of leaning into them.
Missing from all of these archetypes is what I believe to be essential for the modern male: a drive to shape the world, emotional fluency, and a reverence for calculated risks. More on that later.

6: The delusional desire to be self-sufficient

Men seem to suffer from the delusion that in order for their success to be valid, they have to achieve it entirely on their own.
In reality, there is no such thing as a “Self made man.” There are only those who ask for help when they need it and those who fail.
Personally, I’ve relied heavily on help from friends, family, and professionals. They’ve helped me financially, emotionally, mentally, materially, and physically. Assistance from other people has grown my business, led me to happiness and purpose, healed me after breakups, and delivered Gatorade when I was hung over.
But asking for help doesn’t come naturally to me. It’s a skill I had to learn. It felt like swallowing my pride. If you’re a man that needs to learn to ask for help, I’d encourage you to go through the same process I went through:
First, reflect on the times when you’ve been asked to help other people. There’s a good chance that you felt happy someone asked for your assistance. It probably made you feel needed and important. Realize that other people will be happy to help you. You’ll contribute to their inner desire to be needed.
Second, start by asking for something small. Ask to borrow a few bucks from a buddy at work. Once that becomes more comfortable, ask for advice on a project. Keep moving the line until you’re able to ask for all the help that you need. You’ll notice that in doing so, everything you care about comes more easily to you.
Finally, when other people ask you for help, provide assistance with as much grace and humility as you can.

Additional practices for the modern man

Though I’ve included suggestions on how men can embrace their masculinity throughout the article, I’d like to make a few additional recommendations. As always, pay attention to the ideas that excite you and make you nervous.
Stop pretending to be strong and allow yourself break already. Virtually all men pretend to be stronger than they are. This is a form of emotional immaturity, and it leads to self-loathing. Allowing yourself to break from time to time will improve your life by clearing negative emotion and offering perspective. Additionally, when you finally allow yourself to break and feel the pain you’ve been denying, it will burn off. In it’s place you’ll find a stable base of resilience and true strength.
Spend time in solitude. This can be a road trip, a camping trip, a silent retreat, whatever. The point is to spend time alone, focused exclusively on yourself. For a few days each year, minimize your engagement with the outside world. It’s easiest if you keep your phone and computer off.
Learn to master your vices. For most people, this is as easy as intentionally taking a month off from them. This allows you to regain control over yourself. If you smoke cigarettes and drink coffee every day, stop smoking and drinking coffee for a few weeks. If you go to the horse races after work, take time off. If you’ve been playing video games daily since college, take a month off. If you always watch porn when you masturbate, eliminate pornography for a while. You may return to your vices if you choose, but make sure that you’ve mastered them first. The goal is to be in possession of yourself.
Periodically host or attend a guy’s night. Personally I like poker nights, but going to a baseball game, hitting a cigar bar, or doing a whiskey tasting all have a near universal appeal.
Reach out to your guy friends more often. Call to say hi. Invite them to a game. Tell them a funny story. Whatever. I promise they are just as lonely as you are, and they will be delighted to hear from you. In fact, if they’re being honest, it will likely be the highlight of their day.
Learn to deepen your presence in this world. One of the greatest masculine gifts is presence. The more you deepen yours, the more powerful you will become.  You can do this through meditating, reflecting, journaling, focusing on one task at a time, and spending time in solitude.

A return to raw masculinity…

I’ll leave you with a sketch of a man who has embraced his masculinity. This is the man I strive to be, and it’s the man that I so often see lacking in modernity.
He has the courage to face – and shape – his internal and external reality. He is engaged by building a life that is an authentic representation of his truth. He knows that there is a time to lead and a time to follow, and can distinguish between the two. He accepts that he is – and always will be – a work in progress.
He keeps his body and mind sharp. When he enters a room you can feel his presence. He approaches his shame, fear, anxiety, tension, and truth with openness and vulnerability. He embraces his sexual identity without letting it define him. He knows that he must periodically enter solitude to connect to himself. Doing so allows him to share his deep gifts with the world.
He periodically approaches the precipice of his comfort zone, and then peers over the edge. He invests in himself and the people around him. He understands the importance of making himself vulnerable, even when it’s scary. Especially when it’s scary.  
He measures his success in life based on two simple questions: is my life an authentic expression of my truth? Are the people and communities that I care about better because of my involvement? He trusts that if he can answer, “Yes” to these questions, money, sex, love, connection, happiness, meaning, and eventually contentment will follow.
FOOTNOTE

  1. This section is written from a heterosexual perspective. I’ve chosen to do this because I can only write about what I know. To pretend like I understand the reality of a homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, transexual, or queer man wouldn’t only be ignorant, it would be offensive.

Read More By Jason Connell on the ManTalk Blog
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IMG_4239Jason Connell is a speaker and writer who teaches confidence, self-love, and self-compassion.
He’s worked with everyone from Senior members of the Obama administration and professional athletes to middle school students and emerging entrepreneurs.
He shares his thoughts on life, authenticity, and power at: JasonConnell.co.

I've Never Met a Happy Wimp

Michael Van Osch shares the story of a mentor with legendary conviction, who taught him the simply philosophy, “I’ve never met a happy wimp.”

Michael Van Osch remembers the incomparable power of the influence of a strong mentor.

Once in a while, a man comes along that so personifies real, positive manhood that he simply can’t be ignored. His mere existence can inspire legions of boys and men to be better, to accomplish big things and to be the rocks our society needs. He may or may not be famous outside of his own circle, but the impact he has is great.

If, like me, you’ve had a man such as this in your life, you count yourself blessed and lucky as you strive to live up to the higher standard set by his influence. My mentor, Donald “Moe” Targosz, was one of those special men. Moe was many things: an ex-pro football player, English teacher, winning football coach, businessman, husband and father, not to mention an avid ice-fisherman. But above all, when you met him, you knew immediately that this was a real man. You knew because he lived every day by his principles—principles backed by beliefs that simply couldn’t be shaken by the winds of folly, fad, and social pressure.

I can proudly say that this bear of a man with a bald head and a crooked chin was my mentor from my late teens until 2010, when he succumbed to cancer. And when you get to have as many conversations over almost 30 years as I did with a man like Moe, you wish somehow that you had a recording of every one of them to which you could refer back in times of discouragement and despair.

♦◊♦

After losing such an important figure in my life, I find myself looking back to the lessons I’ve learned and the struggles I’ve overcome in my life, thanks in part to Moe’s help and advice. Equally adept in making his point by using a quote from Shakespeare or by making a football analogy, Moe opened the minds of many students over his 30-plus-year teaching career at St. Jerome’s High School in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada. He opened our minds to a bigger world—a world where, if you could dream it, you could do it.

Without a doubt, the biggest lesson this man ever taught me can be summed up in a quote that is uniquely Moe:

“I’ve never met a happy wimp.”

Though you may laugh, as I did, upon hearing it for the first time, let it sink in and take root, and you may realize that this one simple statement actually says it all. It may not sound like Shakespeare, but like a single line from the Bard, it conveys a wealth of knowledge.

What at first may seem to be mere bravado, upon inspection becomes the most succinct way of saying that if you want to be happy in your life, then it is up to you. It is up to you to:

  • Stand up for that in which you believe
  • Go after what you want out of life
  • Refuse to settle
  • Respect yourself and others
  • Keep your word
  • Refuse to compromise your principles and values for anything
  • Overcome fear and be open to new people and ideas
  • Dream big and take risks as a part of your life
  • Continuously move out of your comfort zone to find and live your calling.

♦◊♦

Let’s test-drive Moe’s quote, shall we? Think about men you know in your own life. Who are the happy, successful men? The ones who continually compromise themselves, the small thinkers, and those operating out of fear? How about the ones who have given up on their dreams or those who don’t do what they say they’ll do—are they the ones you admire?

How about putting yourself to the test? We know that happiness doesn’t come from the “outside,” so when you’re not “feeling it,” simply ask yourself if you’re acting like the man you want to be. Are you living to the best of your ability at work, with your family and friends, and with yourself? Are you making the hard choices, or are you taking the easy way out? 

We live in an age when it can be very easy to forget that becoming the man you want to be actually takes action; yes, even work. Unfortunately, it’s not simply a question of entering a Google search for “man” and hitting return. No, it’s a lifelong process that requires intentional effort, learning, and sometimes re-learning timeless lessons from men who have gone before us.

It is not always easy or popular to do what you believe is right. Moe was often in opposition against school officials and other teachers for doing what he knew was right—for what he knew was best for the young men he was teaching. And that’s where his strength showed, because, despite threats and many roadblocks along the way, he did what he thought was best for his students. Near the end of his teaching career, his refusal to compromise his beliefs got him fired—he wouldn’t acquiesce; he wouldn’t lower his standards. So he picked up and went on to be a very successful businessman until he passed away. How many of us are willing to stand by our principles when faced with the possibility of losing our livelihood?

♦◊♦

But that’s the whole point, isn’t it? Moe would have been “an unhappy wimp” going against his own code. Being a wimp has nothing to do with physical size and stature, how much you can bench-press, or how suave you are/arent’ with the ladies. A wimp, in its real definition, is someone who goes against his own principles, who doesn’t fight for his beliefs but caves under pressure and looks only for battles he knows he can win.

At the end of the day, all we have as men (and women) are the choices that we make. And it’s those choices that determine the legacies that we leave. It may feel that our current world, one of offices and sterile conference rooms, is so far from the days of old, where knights showed bravery and honor on blood-soaked battlefields, that Moe’s quote and underlying call to action is simply ideological rather than practical. But make no mistake that today, this conference room, office and cubicle, this is our modern battleground. This is the place where we decide how we live and what legacies we leave. This, just as Moe would echo, is our equivalent of the moment in Hamlet when Shakespeare gives us his everlasting call to action, “This above all: to thine own self be true.”

In other words, “I’ve never met a happy wimp.” Thanks, Moe.

This article originally appeared on The Good Men Project.

__________

mastermind

As a coach and author, Michael Van Osch helps uncommon men escape the corporate trap, seize the freedom of being an entrepreneur and build the life and income they imagined. Meet Michael at http://michaelvanosch.com.

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Man Of The Week – Benjamin Ritter

Benjamin Ritter has worked in the fields of public health, interpersonal development, and healthcare for the past 8 years. The last 2 years he has worked as an executive at Presence Saints Mary and Elizabeth Medical Center (PSMEMC), and runs his own consultancy practice focused on interpersonal development, dating and relationships. Ben has cultivated his leadership skills through personal and professional experiences. Through his career working in interpersonal development he has also solidified mentoring, coaching, and teaching techniques towards creating, and sustaining positive behavioral change.

Ben is a man of many talents, from authoring the book The Essentials – your one stop shop to life improvement and success with women, to hosting a live dating and relationship advice show through Dose.com, curating the Interfaith Relationships workshop, the Value Systems workshop, and co-hosting the Suave Lover podcast; featured multiple times as a top podcast in the area of Sexuality on iTunes, and host of the Live for Yourself podcast. He is a freelance writer in the topics of interpersonal development, dating, and relationships for Huffington Post, AskMen, TheGoodMenProject, ManTalks, and Elite Daily, and has been featured as an expert in a variety of other sources. Through his consultancy he has helped countless men and women with their personal development, dating, and relationship issues. He can be reached through his main website at: www.benjamin-ritter.com

Ben will also be speaking at the very first ManTalks Chicago event centred around ‘Mentorship’ on November 7th, 2016. Click here for more details and to RSVP.

Age: 31

What do you do? (Work)
Through workshops, and one on one consulting I lead people towards the change they want to see in themselves in their personal and professional lives.

Why do you do it?
Everyone has the opportunity to be satisfied and fulfilled in their personal and professional lives, but those aren’t courses that are included in school curriculums. Satisfied and fulfilled people create more satisfaction and fulfillment and are more likely to impact the world in a positive way. Improving public health through personal development and social relationships is my passion.

How do you make a difference in the world? (Work, business, life, family, self)
Eventually I would like to do something on a grander scale, even though I have no idea the impact of the personal transformations that I instigate. My background in public health began with the desire to impact public health policy and maybe that is in my future but current I spark and build people into their ideal version of themselves while reframing what “ideal” means, as well as improve their dating lives and relationships. Professionally and personally I also try to bring the values of personal respect, genuine interest, and the desire for others to succeed into every single one of my relationships.

What are 3 defining moments in your life?
1) My first personal heartbreak. The memory of a love lost, and how it affected me personally was an incredible learning experience even at a young age.
2) My first professional heartbreak (losing my purpose), which ultimately led me to reframing my perspective on happiness, success, fulfillment, and dating/relationships.
3) Working a variety of jobs, especially hospitality (construction, dog walking, deli, server, retail, camp counselor, day care, a variety of brand ambassador gigs, modeling, acting, bartending, corporate healthcare, public health departments, and more – less a moment, more an experience). These experiences, especially working in hospitality has unbelievably impacted my character, and understanding of others.

What is your life purpose?
My life purpose is to value each moment and the greatness that can be found within any experience while continuing to spread my appreciation, respect, and genuine interest in the world and the people around me, and hopefully affecting positive social change on the way.

How did you tap into it?
I tapped into my purpose by failing, and having to critically think about purpose and what happiness actually is, and what it represents. Never-ending realism with gratitude helps me consistently tap into my purpose.

Who is your Role-Model or Mentor?
I think that I am a product of a generation, and have specific character traits that make it very difficult for me to have a mentor unless it’s through a structured program such as life-coaching. I am extremely lucky to have such great parents, and specifically I have looked up to the intelligence, compassion, perseverance, social skill and strength that my father has displayed throughout my life.

Do you have any daily habits? If so, what are they?
Practically every day I wake up and review the to-do list I created the night before. I focus on some of the quick ones initially and then move down the list. I also immediately stretch, do ab exercises, and drink about half a gallon of water in the morning. Later in the day I also workout with one day off during the week, which is incredibly helpful for my mind and body. Part of my day is also focusing on my relationships; calling my father and a couple friends.

When do you know your work/life balance is off?
My work/life balance is incredibly important to me and it is rarely off, just out of focus. I tend to get short tempered, frustrated, and sad when I am not living according to my values. That could be my professional or personal life is focused in areas that it should not be.

Vulnerability is a challenge for most men – share a vulnerable moment from your life with us. What did you learn from it?
The moment I lost the purpose I dedicated a large portion of my life towards; despite knowing that it wasn’t right for me, it still is one of the most heart wrenching memories I have. It exemplifies the effect an investment of your mind and body can have on your health and taught me how to properly manage and invest in “your purpose”. Also it’s important to know that emotions are normal, the ups and downs are part of life, feeling them and accepting them allows you to move on and forwards.

If you are or were going to be a mentor for another man, what is one piece of advice you would give him?
There are so many pieces of advice I would want to give. If I had to choose only one, I would explain that there are no standard templates for living and never to allow someone else’s template control and impose on your life.

How do you be the best partner (Boyfriend/Husband- past or present)
Work towards tomorrow. Any fight in the bigger scheme of things is insignificant when you remember that you are going to be together. Your partner almost always has your best interest at heart. Give them the benefit of the doubt.

Do you support any Charities or Not-for-profits? (Which one(s) and why?)
Sports and soccer specifically has always played a huge role in my life. I love the Chicago Fire Foundation for what they provide to the in need and at risk youth of Chicago. I also love what Cease Fire is doing. There are just so many people doing such great things.

If your life had a theme song, what would it be?
Lean on me by Bill Withers

Where do you see yourself in 3 years?
Transforming future and current leaders like I am now but on a grander scale. I hopefully will have written another book by then, and have taken my work in-person to a variety of cities around the world.

What legacy do you want to leave for future generations?
I would like there to be a movement towards institutionalized learning based on facts in regards to personal development, dating, attraction, sexuality, and relationships.

What One book would you recommend for any Man?
Reframing by Richard Bandler and John Grinder

 
If you know a Man that is making a positive impact on the world, we would love to hear from you! Contact us at [email protected]

“Those Aren’t Your Kids”

Imagine this: You’re twenty-nine, you’re a gay man, and

you’ve fallen in love. But he has two children who are with

him almost all of the time. You quickly fall into a groove with

the man. But most of the time you’re together, the kids are

with you too. To go out, he has to hire a babysitter so you stay

in quite a bit. While you love this man, you’re not quite sure

how you fit in. You clearly are not going to attempt to be the

kids’ father, because they already have one. And you clearly

are not going to attempt to be their mother, because you are a

man and they already have a mom. So what are you? What do

the kids call you? How do you describe your relationship?

Does this mean that you now have kids too, or are they just

“his” kids? As a father, he has a clearly defined role in the

household, but what’s yours?

 

And everyone keeps telling you, “Those Aren’t Your Kids.”

 
That is an excerpt from my book Out and About Dad: My Journey as a Father With all its Twists, Turns, and a Few Twirls. In it, I chronicle my life as a gay father from back in the day when none of that was discussed, accepted, or embraced. I chronicle the life of really any active father, being gay just added a lot of extra pressure.
In my book I also tried to give credit to my now husband of one year, but partner of eighteen. He too was in a fatherhood role, with all of the responsibility but none of the credit or legal protection. As a gay man, I barely felt like I had any legal protection, so being a “step” must have felt even worse.
But the truth is that I could never possibly give my husband enough credit for what he went through raising two kids that were not biologically his own, not legally his own, and not societally his own. Yet he did laundry, shopped for groceries, cooked meals, maintained the house, made school lunches, and yes even did the school projects (I thank him the most for that because I was a horror show at school projects). He did all this without any acknowledgement or thank you. In fact, he did it under great scrutiny and social commentary, despite his devotion to those kids and to me.
I made career choices all along the way so that I could be an active father, despite being divorced and despite society assuming that the mother takes control. I also need to acknowledge the career choices he made as well.
Shortly after we bought a house together, he quit his job that was over an hour away to join the marketing agency that I had started. He did that so that he could run the office while I was out with clients, and so that he could be home early for the kids. After we sold the agency and my work and travel ramped up significantly, he quit his job so that he could be more around for the kids. He literally became a stay-at-home dad, a rarity at the time whether gay or straight.
Stay-at-home moms often got a lot of grief, so imagine a gay stay-at-home dad at the grocery store. Let’s just say that there wasn’t a lot of acceptance from anyone. Not from the moms, not from the dads, and not even from other gay men. As much as I was an anomaly, he was even more rare.
I always told him that he was one-of-a-kind, and I guess I really was right!
He made sure that the house was in order, the kids had what they needed, and I had all the support required to grow an aggressive career. I literally couldn’t have done it without him. Interestingly, I got all the credit for it…I was the dad. He instead got stares and comments like, “Those aren’t your kids,” and “Wow, he’s so lucky he doesn’t have to work.”
As if.
Our now adult kids are happily off pursuing their own journeys…one in graduate school and the other in the last year of college. While I know that they had it rough too, just like anyone growing up, they are well rounded, spirited, and on their way to being successful. Yes, because of their mother. Yes, because of their father. But also because of this other parental figure in the mix as well…the one that never gets credit but is full of just as much pride.
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JimJosephCasualHeadshot

Entrepreneur of the Year, Agency of the Year, Consumer Launch Campaign of the Year, Most Creative Agency, Best Place to Work, Social Media Icon, Hall of Fame – these are the accolades that Jim Joseph has amassed through his long career in marketing.
But none are more important than the daily badge he wears with the most pride – Dad.
Jim Joseph is the proud father of two children. He has spent the last twenty-plus years raising them, looking after their physical and emotional well-being, and building their confidence to navigate their own lives.
 
While he’s written a trilogy of marketing books and is a regular contributor to Entrepreneur and Huffington Post, it’s his newest book and blog posts on fatherhood that represent what’s most important to him: being an Out and About Dad.
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Mastering the First Impression: Body Language

Body language is a vital skill for life and relationship success. Benjamin Ritter explains how we can win at mastering the first impression.
Within moments of meeting someone, everything about you has been evaluated, summarized and labeled. Similar to the fight-or-flight response, this reaction is an instinctual, mental safety mechanism we call the the first impression.
“Just three seconds are sufficient to make a conclusion about fresh acquaintances” – Nalini Ambady, Professor of Psychology at Tufts University
A large part of having a successful approach with someone new is creating a positive first impression from the time you are noticed until the time you decide to leave. A successful approach has no minimum time limit, does not require intimate conversation, and doesn’t require “Mac Daddy pimping skills,” but it does require making a good first impression.
A. Barbour, author of Louder Than Words: Nonverbal Communication, found that an interaction is perceived through 55 percent body movements (mostly facial expressions), 38 percent vocal (volume, pitch, rhythm, etc), and only 7 percent verbal (words). Which is a much more of a quantitative version of the famous quote from American poet William Carlos, “It is not what you say that matters, but the manner in which you say it; there lies the secret of the ages.”
Body language includes every observable, non-verbal action such as, your position or proximity, facial expressions, eye movements, breathing patterns, and even perspiration. Body language conveys or reveals feelings to others. Understanding the body language of those around you and how to alter your own will heighten your awareness and self control in a variety of situations.
Learning how to interpret body language starts with simply paying attention to people throughout your day. For example, notice how people who are tired move slower, with slumped shoulders, rounded back and half-closed eyes. When people are excited, such as while watching a sporting event, they stand taller, walk with a bounce in their step, smile, have wider eyes, and are more emotive.
Relationships can also be analyzed through body language, revealing the stage, strength, and type of relationships. Through observation, you can start to see trends and learn to understand attractive and unattractive body language. There are five main characteristics of body language that lend an overall impression of attractiveness:

  1. Positive, confident posture (shoulders square, back straight and tall, shoulder-width stance, natural smile).
  2. Emotive, but relaxed hand and arm movements, staying near and below waist level.
  3. Steady and relaxed eye contact. Focus on a person’s eyes to help avoid fidgety eye movements.
  4. Breathing appropriate for the situation. For example, breathing fast and heavy should be reserved for strenuous and athletic situations.
  5. Understanding proximity based on social situations (the study of proxemics).
    1. Close (8-12 in.), highly personal.
    2. Near (12 – 36in.), friendly, social interaction within personal space.
    3. Neutral (4-5 ft.), most social gatherings and business transactions.
    4. Public distance (5- 8 ft.), more formal.

Applying these five attractive body language characteristics is the first step to increasing the chances of success when approaching and interacting. Successful approaches utilize these five general characteristics while incorporating a few others that focus on comfort and interest.
After approaching, it’s vital to be aware of the body language of the other person or people throughout the interaction and respond appropriately to his/her/their level of interest. There are eight main body language tips to consider before and during an approach that will help with success;

  1. Approach in a non-threatening manner (try to stay in his/her/their line of sight, apply non direct, or non-confrontational body language).
  2. Approach groups or individuals that indicate interest (eye contact, a smile, a nervous look away then back, he or she moving closer to you, dancing near you, a raised voice so that you can overhear their conversation, or previous contact from one of the individuals).
  3. Pay attention and utilize relationship dynamics. Focus on the obvious leader of the group who can bring you into the group, notice who to avoid and what topics to keep discussing or avoid (watch for interest/excitement or anger/discomfort). Are they good friends, strangers, couples, flirting? Pay attention to who is focusing on who, touching, undercurrents of admiration, positive feeling, or dislike. This also means recognizing the occasion, birthday, bachelorette party, etc.
  4. Confident, open body posture and proximity (as above). Remain at “near” to “neutral” proximity in the beginning of the approach, without leaning in. Keep drinks and arms from crossing across your body for open body posture.
  5. Display positive and fun expressions. Think positively, act positively, for yourself, for those you’re interacting with, and for those that are watching (with whom you may want to interact later).
  6. Pay attention to opening-up signals. During the approach, does he/she open up (uncrossing arms, orienting body toward you, decreasing social proximity, physical contact, eye contact, displaying instinctually vulnerable body areas such as the neck and wrists) or close off (does he/she cross arms, distance or turn away from you, avoid eye contact, and act nervous).
  7. Imply that you are not a stranger by treating everyone you approach like a friend you haven’t seen or heard from recently. Initially, you want to have “non-direct” and “neutral” body language. But as someone opens up and begins to feel comfortable with you, make minor, non-sexual physical contact, lower your voice and whisper something in near or close personal space, mirroring/matching body movements, while focusing on the person entirely.
  8. Do every movement 100 percent. Do not hesitate when you approach. Move your hands, eyes, lips, and every other part of your body with confidence. You have to commit completely to your movements to be interpreted properly and appear confident.

A good first impression also means making a good lasting impression. Other than leaving on a positive note, make sure to smile and appear to be having fun in any photos; they supply no other information except body language to create a first impression–and will be up on social media sites in no time.
As your experience with analyzing body language grows, your understanding of social situations from interpreting body language will improve. In the next article, Part 2, I will discuss the 38 percent portion of an interaction, voice.
Read More By Benjamin Ritter on the ManTalks Blog
The 11 Key Steps to Influence
5 Tips to Dramatically Improve Your Relationship
The 5 Areas of Your Life You Need to Go Phoneless
You Don’t Deserve Better, You Deserve to Be Better
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Benjamin-headshotBenjamin Ritter, MBA, MPH, is an interpersonal, dating, and relationship consultant, author of The Essentials, co-host of the Suave Lover podcast, curator of the Interfaith Relationships workshop, and the Values Systems workshop, freelance expert and writer, and healthcare executive.
He has years of direct client, personal, and social experiences towards improving and solving internal development, dating, and relationship situations. For more information go to; http://www.benjamin-ritter.com.
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Man Of The Week – Jonny Imerman

Our MOTW Jonny Imerman opens up about overcoming cancer and will speak at ManTalks Chicago November 7th, 2016 on ‘Mentorship’.
At 26 years old in 2001, Jonny Imerman was diagnosed with testicular cancer.  After doctors surgically removed one of his testicles, he did five months of chemotherapy and became cancer-free.  But almost a year later, four tumors popped up again near his spine.  After another surgery, an 11-inch incision, and three months of recovery, Jonny was back in remission.During his cancer fight, he realized what needed to change in the cancer world.  Despite loving support from family and friends, he was unable to find a cancer survivor like him.  Jonny wondered: “What if every cancer fighter could talk to a cancer survivor, who not only had beaten the same type of cancer, but who also was around the same age and gender as the fighter?”  The cancer survivor would be an angel ⎯ walking, living proof that the fighter could win too.  That amazing connection would provide inspiration, knowledge, and hope.  This is why he created Imerman Angels, a non-profit organization, which carefully matches a person touched by cancer (a cancer fighter or survivor) with someone who has fought and survived the same type of cancer (a Mentor Angel). Today, Imerman Angels now has more than 6,000 cancer survivors and more than 1,500 caregivers in its network, and has been featured by dozens of news organizations including The Wall Street Journal, Harpo Radio’s “Oprah and Friends” with Dr. Oz, CNN, TEDx, The Huffington Post, Men’s Health and National Public Radio (NPR) to name just a few!Jonny will be speaking at the very first ManTalks Chicago event centred around ‘Mentorship’ on November 7th, 2016. Click here for more details and to RSVP.
Age: 41 years old
What do you do? (Work)
I work for Imerman Angels, a FREE 1:1 peer mentoring program for families fighting cancer– we introduce them to a survivor (or family member) who’s shared the SAME EXPERIENCE and has had a positive outcome– to inspire, motive, and give knowledge, strength, and hope! ImermanAngels.org

Why do you do it?
I was diagnosed with testicular cancer at 26– did chemo, surgeries for about 2 years of my 20s– so we got together with a group of survivors that has grown now to about 8,000 volunteer survivors/caregivers– to GIVE BACK, and mentor, 1 on 1, those in the same fight today!  GRATITUDE– is WHY we do what we do! We’re all blessed to be alive and well!!
How do you make a difference in the world? (Work, business, life, family, self)
See above

What are 3 defining moments in your life?
3 defining moments of my life are getting cancer, creating Imerman Angels with a group of survivors who all care, and moving to Chicago in 2005 to get a fresh start on life after cancer.  Clearly, cancer has a lot of POSITIVES in my life!!
What is your life purpose?
I believe Imerman Angels is my life purpose, to help CONNECT and BUILD BRIDGES in the cancer world– but also helping other great causes and sharing what we’ve learned with other social entrepreneurs– to make the world a better place in a lot of ways!!  GRATEFUL to have so many social entrepreneurs friends who do great things in a lot of difference arenas! 

How did you tap into it?
It’s easy to tap into great causes when you CARE.Who is your Role-Model or Mentor?
Howard Tullman is one of my mentors, CEO of 1871 in Chicago.  Howard is an idea generating machine, helps so many causes, serves on the IA board, and takes SO much time to help SO many great causes– he’s a powerhouse of a human and has inspired me and helped IA in so many ways!!
Do you have any daily habits? If so, what are they?
My daily habits are wearing an IA tshirt everyday, eating oatmeal every morning, working out everyday, and surrounding myself with GOOD people and idea people everyday
When do you know your work/life balance is off?
I know my work/life balance is off when my VOICE goes away.. I talk all day long, and eventually my body tells me to slow down when i lose my voice lol!
Vulnerability is a challenge for most men – share a vulnerable moment from your life with us.
Opening our cancer experiences make us vulnerable– it’s the FIRST step in letting others in to help them– and essential in education and saving lives!

If you are or were going to be a mentor for another man, what is one piece of advice you would give him?
The best advice I feel i I can offer is LIVE YOUR PASSION– throw your life into it! Find a WAY to live your life filled with your individual passion– and hopefully it makes the world a better place as well! It’s the BEST life I feel!!
How do you be the best partner (Boyfriend/Husband- past or present)

I’m single at the moment, and so not much good advice for anyone here haha!
Do you support any Charities or Not-for-profits? (Which one(s) and why?)
I support hundreds of causes and non-profit friends– just a few of these causes are PAWS, Anti-Cruelty Society, ONEGOAL, LaunchU, Breakthrough Urban Ministries, Above & Beyond Center to fight addiction, and anyone with a great cause making the world a better place!
If your life had a theme song, what would it be?
If my life had a theme song, it would be “I’ll Take you There” — that’s how we ALL feel on our team in our ability to help and INSPIRE those with cancer!
Where do you see yourself in 3 years?

In 3 years I see myself staying busy and helping Imerman Angels grow to helping thousands to tens of thousands of people across the world!
What One book would you recommend for any Man?
Confession– I haven’t read a book since 26 years old! I can’t read books. I know– crazy.  I just can’t get myself to sit and read– i’m always on the move, and people are my currency, so I own it and stick to what my senses tell me is the best life– without books haha.
If you know a Man that is making a positive impact on the world, we would love to hear from you! Contact us at [email protected]

Man Of The Week – Jeff Perera

For over eight years, Jeff Perera has been working to help inspire new models of possibility for manhood: having spoken to men, young men and boys across Canada and beyond on how we can strive toward change within, and be part of nurturing healthier ideas of manhood where we work, live, study, worship and play. Today, Jeff is a Speaker and Facilitator with Next Gen Men, who work with young men and boys, as well as engage and educate men around conversations of toxic versus mindful masculinities. He has delivered two TEDx talks: ‘Words Speak Louder that Actions’ and ‘The Ladder of Manhood’. If that wasn’t enough, Jeff also writes over at Higher Unlearning, exploring how limiting ideas of gender impact men in everyday life. Jeff shares some poetic and inspiring words in his interview and ManTalks is honoured to have Jeff Perera as our newest Man Of The Week!

Age: 41 (but don’t look it! Being brown don’t let ya down!)

What do you do? (Work)
I am a Speaker and Facilitator with Next Gen Men. I’ve spoken to tens of thousands of young men, boys and men across Canada and abroad, for eight years, about our ideas of manhood and new models of possibility for men.

Why do you do it?
I realized years ago that how many of us answer the question of what it means to be a man, is at the core of so many of the challenges, issues and struggles that people of all genders face. Traditions and concepts of what manhood is or isn’t, impact everything; from our lives at home or work, or where we study or worship, as well as our relationship with the environment, our true self, and with each other. As men, working to give ourselves the freedom to be our best self, in turn helps nurture the world we want to live in,

How do you make a difference in the world? (Work, business, life, family, self)
What I have learned again and again is: The way forward begins with us, within us. There are many men who want to explore living a more full, meaningful, heartfelt life; embracing vulnerability and fear, and not facing it all alone. I look to help men open their heart’s eye and strive to see the invisible: how these toxic ideas of manhood are both the rope used to section off people of other genders in everyday life, as well as the chain holding men back from our whole humanity. My hope is to help inspire others to genuinely begin their journey from head to heart, and from heart to action: showing up in their own lives, and the lives of others. My role is to help convey to men and boys that change must be ongoing within us, but that you are not alone and that we can take this journey together.

What are 3 defining moments in your life?
– The day I realized the person I wanted to be: as a little child witnessing my father (who was a violent tyrant at home) back down and hide in his car from a drunk man who wanted to fight him.
– The day I saw my father’s dead body.
– A quiet moment when I decided to leave a 9-5 job because I wanted to own the impact I make, and what those waves to continue to be after I’ve left this world.

What is your life purpose?
I want to be the lesson in action, and inspire others to try as well. I want to hold a mirror up for others, so we learn to truly see our role in everyday situations. That starts with role modelling the process and looking in that mirror ourselves. I want to be a gentle voice inviting you into this conversation, but also push and provoke you: make you comfortable with discomfort (that place where our real inner growth happens.)

How did you tap into it?
Too many men have a void in their lives: not having emotionally present models and mentors. I call these models of possibility ‘Maps to Manhood’, someone who you can talk to or just learn from by seeing how they navigate life. I decided to aspire to be the example I was looking for, fill the void for myself and others. That process has brought into my life amazing men from whom I learn from and unlearn with.

Who is your Role-Model or Mentor?
Muhammad Ali. We can learn from anyone and everyone (and need to always listen for the lesson) but the life he lived was his message to us. Ali was the voice telling us to get back up, to stand up. Ali taught us to answer the bell, rise up, and get into the ‘Ring of our own Life’. He said: “True success is reaching our potential without compromising our values.” He demonstrated the will to work and work, battle yourself and all circumstances in order to achieve your goals, and be ready to sacrifice it all for what matters. I strive to be half the man he was.

Do you have any daily habits? If so, what are they?
I mentioned mirrors earlier, I take a moment to look in the mirror every day. It is my reminder to not just see my physical self, but my entire self. To be present and mindful in each moment as much as I can be, and try harder than that, in order to own everything I’ve done and didn’t do. I want to focus not the impression I leave with others so much as the impact I have on others. Trying to talk to myself using loving speech also!

When do you know your work/life balance is off?
I talk more and more these days about ‘Mindful Masculinities’. When I am truly striving to be present, show up, enter the Ring of my own life: in everyday, simple moments I can tell when I am not at my best. We all have those ‘engine light’ or ‘oil change’ symbols light up on our inner dashboard: those moments when a quiet voice whispers “you need to take a break” or “put the email away and go sit with your child for a bit”.
Humbly, I would like to submit that the pursuit of ‘work/life balance’ is a fruitless chase that sets us up for failure. Instead, I believe the key is seeking to find harmony within every moment in Life. This is a fluid state where we seek to maintain amidst the ever-changing highs and lows. We are in constant motion, our lives are never truly in a stand-still state until our last breath. Life is like crossing a tightrope towards our destination, as we carry all our life’s relationships, projects, aspirations, challenges and responsibilities in our hands. The goal is to constantly seek harmony within the present moment, both when it is quiet, or when we face the gusts of Life’s winds of challenge… all while moving in a forward motion. This is our endless work: staying tuned in, learning to adjust and thrive, all while seeking to be one with this very moment.

Vulnerability is a challenge for most men – share a vulnerable moment from your life with us.
I want to be the person that reaches out to you when things are at their lowest, not someone who shows up when you are riding waves of success. I think we need to start doing that for ourselves, with ourselves.
In the very near future, I seek to openly talk about my mistakes and lessons learned. I think it is time we opened up as men and owned our shit. Taking ownership of our actions, behaviour and impact. I am writing a piece about this topic, in which I wrote: “To Men everywhere, this isn’t about the ‘Day of our Reckoning’, this is about the Day of our Awakening.”
In 2015, I started a year-long journey to explore and own my past actions and reputation, and ask myself hard questions. I did a lot of listening, talking with women from different periods of my life: colleagues, friends, acquaintances, women I’ve interacted with in community work, as well as women I dated in the past. I wanted to better know myself through the narrative others have of me, based on my impact in the community. This wasn’t solely about me, my hurt feelings or my guilt, but more about learning of any hurt or harm I may have caused.

What did you learn from it?
As a result, I started having much deeper, vulnerable conversations with men in my life, modelling how we can help one another do this emotional work together. Sharing my journey helped me open up conversations with men, as we discussed regrets, shame and fear of talking openly about mistakes, and how we need to do this work together. Instead of leaving women in our lives to do all the heavy emotional lifting for us, we can share in the emotional, healing, self-awareness work amongst other fellow men.
Ben Okri said “Stories can conquer fear. They can make the heart larger.” We can humbly share our experiences together as men, to help our own healing and learning, and others too. I started a monthly gathering in Toronto: a private circle of men I knew trying to be positive role models in our communities. There we open up and share, and listen to one another. No performance, no judgements, not as a PR move to salvage our name after a mistake made. Raw, real honest truths and buried fears. We need to model doing emotional labour together as men, where there isn’t reward (i.e. opening up with the goal of achieving romantic or sexual pursuits).
Next Gen Men has started monthly gatherings in Calgary, and soon other cities like Toronto (which I will be organizing) called ‘Wolf Pack’. (http://nextgenmen.ca/our-program/wolf-pack) These will be spaces where men can have these conversations together, open to people of all genders. Wolf Pack aims to tackle challenges of social isolation amongst adult men by helping foster social connection and new friendships through vulnerable and supportive conversations around topics of depth.

If you are or were going to be a mentor for another man, what is one piece of advice you would give him?
I am looked to by some as an ‘expert’ on healthy masculinities, but anyone who says they have the ‘quick-fix, follow these three easy steps, just-add water’ solutions to being a better man is working a con. The path toward being your better self (not better than someone else, but better that who you were yesterday) is a lifelong journey. There are no shortcuts, no quick solutions, we have to roll up our sleeves and develop the resolution to truly face ourselves, with love. A self-love that is accountability, transparency and humility.

How do you be the best partner (Boyfriend/Husband- past or present)
Know Yourself.

Do you support any Charities or Not-for-profits? (Which one(s) and why?)
Let me tell you about three, starting with the one I work for!
Next Gen Men (www.nextgenmen.ca) is a youth-led, nonprofit organization focused on building better men through youth and peer engagement, education and empowerment. We believe that by engaging, educating, and empowering our peers, we can ensure that the next generation of men will make a positive impact on their communities.
Reclaim Your Voice (www.abusesurvivalstories.com) is a nonprofit event series which provides a platform for men and women who have experienced domestic violence, psychological and sexual abuse, to reclaim their voices. Combining raw testimonials from survivors with inspirational spoken word pieces and motivational speeches, Reclaim Your Voice is a positive and healing experience that uplifts both the mind and the soul.
FYOU: THE FORGIVENESS PROJECT (www.thefyouproject.ca) is a movement that started after rape-survivor Tara Muldoon did not find justice in the justice system. After realizing forgiveness would have to come from within, she created a platform for youth and young adults to speak openly about what it means to forgive. FYOU is now a team that runs programming and workshops internationally. The entire movement is comprised of youth and young adults.

If your life had a theme song, what would it be?
‘Sure Looks Good To Me’ by Alicia Keys.

Where do you see yourself in 3 years?
I see myself doing what I am doing today, but in different and ever-evolving ways; hopefully having learned more and grown each day from now to that moment in time.

What legacy do you want to leave for future generations?
I hope to be seen as a person who left it all in the ring. I want to be someone who inspired others to reach deeper and do better: not just in my words but my deeds and actions, and the impact I had on others.

What One book would you recommend for any Man?
The Autobiography of Malcolm X
(Also: Man Up: Reimagining Modern Manhood by Carlos Andrés Gómez)

If you know a Man that is making a positive impact on the world, we would love to hear from you! Contact us at [email protected]

Your Suffering Has Meaning if You Want it To

This post originally appeared in the Be Yourself publication on Medium

The first time I’d ever contemplated suicide, I was sitting in a deflated beanbag chair fit for half of a person.

I was in the bedroom of my frat-house and wondering what it’d be like to kill myself by tying one end of a shitty belt I owned to my door knob and letting my body fall limp to the floor.

I’d lost sight of everything.

What the fuck was I doing with my life? was a common refrain.

But also the feeling that my existence had no meaning.

I was stuck in that existential void which usually crops up when you’re so stuck in the past and you have your identity wrapped around something that you have such little control over that you lose sight of everything.

So I’d just sit in my beanbag chair that had run out of fluff, play videogames the entire day and it’d be an absolute fucking chore to get out of the house.

(Part of me was saying, get the fuck up and go do something you lazy piece of shit.)

When I did leave my house it was usually to pick up alcohol and/or get drunk and little else.

So that was my existence at the time: play video games and get drunk, and feel fucking miserable.

And I didn’t understand why.

I just said, I feel empty right now and like I want to die and my friends would just say, get over it, bro. In hindsight, that was the only advice I had to go off of and it sounded pretty reasonable.

Relative to most, I had little to suffer for: I had friends, I wasn’t completely incompetent or handicapped, I was going to a great school and my life wasn’t particularly difficult.

Private college is nothing like Rwanda, but you can imagine anything when you’re feeling extra delusional.

But suffering is relative. Your suffering looks completely different than mine. My suffering was more existential.

In reality, suffering, depression, thoughts of suicide and the like, they’re a product of uncertainty.

Uncertainty about the future.

If we’re certain that tomorrow, or next week or the month after, we’ll inherit 72 virgins, millions of dollars and day-to-day work that fills us to the brim with enjoyment, we will figure out a way to live to see that day regardless of daily circumstances.

If we think that the next weeks and months and years will only be full of suffering and that we’ll never find a way out, death will always find a way into our subconscious.

We’re suckers for meaning, because all of the movies tell us that you can will it so.

Accepting Our Pain

“Both men had talked of their intentions to commit suicide. Both used the typical argument — they had nothing more to expect from life. In both cases it was a question of getting them to realize that life was still expecting something from them; something in the future was expected of them.” 
Man’s Search for Meaning, Victor E. Frankl

I had an emotional breakdown the other day — the details of why, I won’t get into, but the brutality of it all, I will.

I was feeling particularly low and self-loathing and I’d taken a small problem and turned it into a small continent. And before I knew it I couldn’t sleep, was stewing and mad at myself for feeling like shit.

If you want to see what this nasty vicious cycle looks like, I’m happy to highlight it in a future article, but just know that it gets fucking dark in there.

And so, I was standing in the shower and I could feel that pain, and so I just kept repeating to myself, I’m in pain. I’m in a lot of fucking pain. And I’m scared and I don’t know what to do.

Often when I get at something that shakes me to the core — something deep in my throat or cock or whatever — something intense comes out.

Moments later, waterworks.

Tears and blubbering and gasping for breath and snot.

A vicious and horrifying cry, if there ever was one.

And I finally started to wrap my head around something, because I was trying to find some meaning behind all of this pain.

And I think, jogging around in my mind, I’d finally found the disconnect:

I want to love myself as much as the people in my life love me.

There’s a lot of pain that I suffer through in silence.

Secretly I hate myself. I never feel good enough. I’ll do something amazing and get a temporary lift and I’ll feel that high for a day or two, but then I’ll immediately cut myself down through words or actions.

Veiled self-criticism that’s really meant in jest, but is often more along the lines of how I feel about myself.

And I have a lot of love for those people and vice-versa, but I haven’t found that in myself.

That’s hard to accept.

I’m working on it, but it’s fucking hard to accept.

Finding Meaning In Suffering

Recently, I’ve started to convince myself that all of the struggles that I go through on a day-to-day basis — mostly, complete uncertainty around my career and job prospects, family drama, death and my sex life — they’re for some sort of outwardly goal or purpose.

Which is part of the reason why I share most of this stuff.

In a sense, I believe that if I share these things with the world and other people, it will enable somebody else to battle their demons, too.

That profound loss of purpose and meaning and sense of self, is particularly prevalent in people who are younger — think, FUCKING MILLENIALS — and older people, too.

(People in the middle, conversely, display a profound sense of “I’ve made it” syndrome in life, so if you desperately want to find that, I’d skip ahead a few years or go back in time.)

And so, it’s easy for us to lose sight of purpose and meaning when we have no real reason to do anything.

And In Loss

A few months ago, I lost my Uncle Jakob.

In the past 60+ years, he’d survived through: The Holocaust, the death of his wife, the death of most of his close friends and family members and worse.

His stories, you’d never believe but they’re amazing and gut-wrenching and terrifying and you’d never believe them.

And the most profound part? He never questioned his existence throughout those struggles.

Even when it was almost certain that most of his close family, they wouldn’t be alive by the time he’d cut through the forest and came out on the other side.

Even when he’d impersonated a Nazi officer to try and retrieve his brother from jail — he was blonde haired, blue-eyed and spoke perfect German — only to have him recaptured and eventually taken away for forever.

Even when somebody had tried to out him as a fucking Jew and have him killed.

(Oh, and he killed that man, in cold-blood. So much for diplomacy.)

He never wondered, am I going to live?

He just focused on, what can I do to survive now?

Don’t worry about, if, if, if… he’d say.

When we’re working a 9–5 job and our boss suddenly informs us that — no, you don’t work here anymore and bye — that crushes our soul because that thing that we’d had so much of our identity wrapped up in is suddenly gone.

Or, when we’re in a relationship and things start to go sour and that’s our only relationship and suddenly our boyfriend or girlfriend is like, I think we need to start seeing other people.

FUCK YOU! YOU NEED TO SEE OTHER PEOPLE.

And with that — those tiny, ultimately meaningless but often pivotal moments in life — we start to question our reality.

Because before it had shifted dramatically, our reality was full of fulfillment — love, a vocation, work, enjoyment, etc.

And suddenly, the one we see now looks nothing like the one it was previously, and we’re scared because we’re uncertain of change.

We don’t know if we can handle it.

Our future was full of certainty and promise and meaning and all of a sudden, it’s full of nothing.

And this is where the darkness comes in.

This is when those pangs of what is the meaning of life? start to become more existential fears of existence.

And those fears, they become depression.

And once that depression becomes far more profound and real, then we start to ask ourselves, what’s the point of living?

And when we can’t answer that — when we don’t have any solid response to that question — then the notion of not living becomes pretty appealing.

“The crowning experience of all, for the homecoming man, is the wonderful feeling that, after all he has suffered, there is nothing he need fear any more — except his God.”

But I’d like to think we can (and should find) meaning in our day-to-day suffering.

I’d like to believe that my thing is something along the lines of, openly sharing my struggles with the world so that other people can find meaning in theirs.

But it’s outwardly. It has little to do with me, and everything to do with the impact it has on other people.

And still, I lose sight of that often.

And I lose track of why I do the things I’m doing, and then hopelessness sets in and I start to tell myself I’m a complete fraud and doing nothing of meaning and blah blah blah.

Then I look at this wall of stuff, I’ve built over the years.

I call it my Wall of Awesome, but I might as well call it a Wall of Abundance or Love or Some Idea I Stole from Somebody Because I Thought It’d Profoundly Change My Life for the Better.

And I’m reminded that the things that I write and I do, they have an impact.

That my words have weight.

Sometimes on lots of people, sometimes on just a few but always on somebody.

Because I’m reminded that the suffering that I go through, it has a reason, whatever that might be.

It has value to at least one other person, even if I want it to go away every day. Even if I want to live in perennial bliss for the rest of my days.

Some of my single greatest moments of suffering have yielded the best stories.

And those stories — if we’re willing to share those gifts with the world — can help other people.

And through sharing that with the world — I think — we can find contentment, if not happiness.

But only if we’re willing to accept that.

__________

mike_kilcoyneMike Kilcoyne lives in Denver, CO, smokes a negligible amount of weed (thanks for asking) and enjoys spending time with his friend’s dogs and his amazing partner.

He also runs mastermind groups for entrepreneurs, designed to help them push through the day-to-day struggle of entrepreneurship in order to do the work they love.

He recently put together this awesome guide on fighting anxiety and procrastination.

Download it for free here.

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